ERISA Plan Fiduciaries’ Response to Mutual Fund Scrutiny

In a previous post, I noted the fact that plan fiduciaries are inquiring into their ERISA fiduciary duties regarding a 401(k) plan's offering of mutual funds which have been the subject of allegations by New York Attorney General Elliot Spitzer….

In a previous post, I noted the fact that plan fiduciaries are inquiring into their ERISA fiduciary duties regarding a 401(k) plan’s offering of mutual funds which have been the subject of allegations by New York Attorney General Elliot Spitzer. The allegations relate to improper “late trading” and “market timing” in mutual fund shares by hedge funds. Gardner Carton & Douglas highlights some of the points to consider in a client alert entitled “How Should Plan Fiduciaries Respond to Current Investigations of Mutual Fund Practices?.”

For those who do not know, a decision to offer or continue to offer a fund in a 401(k) plan as an investment option for participants is a fiduciary act, subject to all of the fiduciary duties and responsibilities under ERISA. The fiduciaries are subject to an ongoing responsibility of monitoring those investment options, and certainly once fiduciaries receive information that casts some doubt on whether or not an investment option continues to be prudent to offer, they must engage in prudent processes and procedures to evaluate that information and determine whether or not the investment option should be replaced. Such processes and procedures should, of course, be well-documented.

But what about the duty to disclose to participants what is going on with these funds if the fiduciaries decide not to eliminate the mutual fund option? The article states that fiduciaries must, of course, respond to any participant inquiries about the mutual funds in question, but goes on to state that “disclosure would generally not be required” absent a change in the investment funds offered. My view would be that the fiduciaries should tread carefully here. Most of the recent class action lawsuits are pivoted around this duty to disclose and most of the courts have held that fiduciaries have a an affirmative duty to disclose material information which might affect a participant’s or beneficiary’s interest in the plan even though the participant or beneficiary does not make an inquiry.

U.S. Supreme Court Info

Denise Howell at Bag and Baggage has some great info on the U.S. Supreme Court here and here: Note-taking is now permissible. The Court now makes available on its website the merits briefs in cases scheduled for oral argument. They…

Denise Howell at Bag and Baggage has some great info on the U.S. Supreme Court here and here:

  • Note-taking is now permissible.
  • The Court now makes available on its website the merits briefs in cases scheduled for oral argument. They do it through a link to the American Bar Association’s Preview.

U.S. Supreme Court Info

Denise Howell at Bag and Baggage has some great info on the U.S. Supreme Court here and here: Note-taking is now permissible. The Court now makes available on its website the merits briefs in cases scheduled for oral argument. They…

Denise Howell at Bag and Baggage has some great info on the U.S. Supreme Court here and here:

  • Note-taking is now permissible.
  • The Court now makes available on its website the merits briefs in cases scheduled for oral argument. They do it through a link to the American Bar Association’s Preview.

Directors and ERISA Fiduciary Liability

The Corporate Board Member has this very good article: “What if Your Company’s 401(k)Plan Lays an Egg?” With respect to the Department of Labor’s suit filed against the Enron plan fiduciaries last summer, the article notes:

The lawsuit, filed by the Department of Labor in June, doesn’t just go after the Enron officers in charge of the 401(k) plan and the executives to whom they reported. It also names as defendants Enron’s board of directors, for not properly overseeing the plan. If the Labor Department prevails at trial, each director will be potentially liable for the entire $2.1 billion Enron 401(k) participants lost.

The article emphasizes how boards can’t afford to wait for Congress to act in defining their ERISA fiduciary responsibilities. It goes on to point out that the suit brought by the DOL “charges Enron’s top officers and board, the supposed monitors of the retirement investment plan, with failing to act on public and private information about the company’s financial condition” and that “[m]any would define this as a brand-new boardroom responsibility.” Quote of note: “Says attorney Sherwin Kaplan: “If plaintiffs’ lawyers had stood up a year ago and said that directors were responsible for telling employees that the company stock was not a good investment, they would have been laughed out of court. This suit has made it a credible position to assert.”

Directors and ERISA Fiduciary Liability

The Corporate Board Member has this very good article: “What if Your Company’s 401(k)Plan Lays an Egg?” With respect to the Department of Labor’s suit filed against the Enron plan fiduciaries last summer, the article notes:

The lawsuit, filed by the Department of Labor in June, doesn’t just go after the Enron officers in charge of the 401(k) plan and the executives to whom they reported. It also names as defendants Enron’s board of directors, for not properly overseeing the plan. If the Labor Department prevails at trial, each director will be potentially liable for the entire $2.1 billion Enron 401(k) participants lost.

The article emphasizes how boards can’t afford to wait for Congress to act in defining their ERISA fiduciary responsibilities. It goes on to point out that the suit brought by the DOL “charges Enron’s top officers and board, the supposed monitors of the retirement investment plan, with failing to act on public and private information about the company’s financial condition” and that “[m]any would define this as a brand-new boardroom responsibility.” Quote of note: “Says attorney Sherwin Kaplan: “If plaintiffs’ lawyers had stood up a year ago and said that directors were responsible for telling employees that the company stock was not a good investment, they would have been laughed out of court. This suit has made it a credible position to assert.”

11-K’s and 906 Certifications: the Final Word?

Earlier this week, Broc Romanek reported in Broc's Daily Blog that Paula Dubberly of the SEC confirmed at an ACCA conference (during the Annual SEC Update) that the SEC, the Department of Justice and the President's Corporate Fraud Task Force…

Earlier this week, Broc Romanek reported in Broc’s Daily Blog that Paula Dubberly of the SEC confirmed at an ACCA conference (during the Annual SEC Update) that the SEC, the Department of Justice and the President’s Corporate Fraud Task Force have jointly concluded that Section 906 of Sarbanes-Oxley does not apply to 8-Ks, 6-Ks and 11-Ks. (Paula Dubberly is associate director (legal) of the Division of Corporate Finance at the SEC and oversees the office of the chief counsel, the office of rule making, and the office of enforcement liaison.) As some of you may recall, there were quite a few posts here back in late May and early June over whether or not the 906 Certification was required for an 11-K filing. (You can read previous posts about the controversy here.) It is great to get some resolution to this issue, but it would be even greater to find it in writing.

11-K’s and 906 Certifications: the Final Word?

Earlier this week, Broc Romanek reported in Broc's Daily Blog that Paula Dubberly of the SEC confirmed at an ACCA conference (during the Annual SEC Update) that the SEC, the Department of Justice and the President's Corporate Fraud Task Force…

Earlier this week, Broc Romanek reported in Broc’s Daily Blog that Paula Dubberly of the SEC confirmed at an ACCA conference (during the Annual SEC Update) that the SEC, the Department of Justice and the President’s Corporate Fraud Task Force have jointly concluded that Section 906 of Sarbanes-Oxley does not apply to 8-Ks, 6-Ks and 11-Ks. (Paula Dubberly is associate director (legal) of the Division of Corporate Finance at the SEC and oversees the office of the chief counsel, the office of rule making, and the office of enforcement liaison.) In case you do not know, there were quite a few posts at Benefitsblog back in late May and early June over whether or not the 906 Certification was required for an 11-K filing. (You can read previous posts about the controversy at Benefitsblog here.) It is great to get some resolution to this issue, but it would be even greater to find it in writing.

UAL Will Seek Waiver to Postpone Pension Contributions

The United Airlines parent, UAL Corp., has announced to employees that it intends to ask the Internal Revenue Service for waivers so it can postpone certain payments to its employee pension plans, contributions that currently are accelerated because the plans…

The United Airlines parent, UAL Corp., has announced to employees that it intends to ask the Internal Revenue Service for waivers so it can postpone certain payments to its employee pension plans, contributions that currently are accelerated because the plans are underfunded. The Wall Street Journal reports in this article: “UAL Will Seek IRS Permission To Postpone Pension Payments.” According to the article, a few months ago UAL estimated it must make $4.2 billion in pension contributions through 2008.

Northwest Airlines, whose three pension plans are underfunded by more than $3 billion, in April received IRS permission to postpone $454 million in payments due this year and to make the contributions over five years starting in April 2004.

RockyMountainNews.com also reports: “UAL to seek pension waivers.”

New IRS Materials Helpful for Plan Compliance

The Internal Revenue Service today released new materials, including a CD-ROM, to help small businesses and plan administrators understand how to keep employee retirement plans eligible for tax-favored status. The materials include a nifty CD-ROM containing a reference guide to…

The Internal Revenue Service today released new materials, including a CD-ROM, to help small businesses and plan administrators understand how to keep employee retirement plans eligible for tax-favored status. The materials include a nifty CD-ROM containing a reference guide to the correction programs offered to plan sponsors by the IRS, the U.S. Department of Labor and the PBGC. The CD-ROM can be accessed in an online form here and is entitled the “Retirement Plans Correction Programs Online Resource Guide.” Highlights of the CD-ROM’s contents:

  • IRS Revenue Procedure 2003-44, which sets forth the procedures relating to the IRS’s correction programs, and a linked in-depth topical index
  • A plain-language explanation of the IRS’s retirement plan correction programs and procedures, with links to definitions and relevant sections of Revenue Procedure 2003-44
  • Video clips explaining the need for ongoing retirement plan self-audit programs and available correction programs
  • A “Guide to Common Qualification Requirements” to help employers understand their responsibilities under the law
  • Examination Guidelines
  • Links to the IRS, DOL and PBGC web sites
  • Frequently asked questions on IRS and DOL correction programs
  • Frequently asked questions on IRA-Based Plans (SEP, SARSEP and SIMPLE)